Art Blakey Quintet - A Night At Birdland, Vol. 1
Label: |
Blue Note |
Genre: |
Jazz |
Product No.: |
ABLU 73218
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UPC: | 602547173218 |
Availability: |
Back Ordered
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Category: |
Vinyl Record |
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A Blue Note essential, A Night At Birdland by the Art Blakey Quintet is part of the Blue Note 75 Anniversary LP reissue campaign, featuring 100 titles; key to the initiative is high-quality audio at affordable prices.
When Art Blakey founded the Jazz Messengers, his initial goal was to not only make his mark on the hard bop scene, but to always bring younger players into the fold, nurture them, and send them out as leaders in their own right. Pianist Horace Silver, trumpeter Clifford Brown, and saxophonist Lou Donaldson were somewhat established, but skyrocketed into stardom after this band switched personnel. Perhaps the most acclaimed combo of Blakey's next to the latter-period bands with Lee Morgan and Wayne Shorter, the pre-Messengers quintet heard on this first volume of live club dates at Birdland in New York City provides solid evidence to the assertion that this ensemble was a one of a kind group the likes of which was not heard until the mid-'60s Miles Davis Quintet.
Three of Silver's greatest contributions to jazz before he turned to original soul and funkier sounds are here. "Split Kick" (introduced by the erudite Pee Wee Marquette) is a definitive hard bop vehicle, as Brown and Donaldson dig into their melody and solo lines with deep affection and joy for this music. "Quicksilver" is more of the same as the horns play in unison and pull the famous lyrical quote from "Hey, You Beautiful Doll." "Mayreh" is a happy reharmonized version of "All God's Children Got Rhythm," hard bop at its best, with Brown on fire.
Of course, Donaldson's forte is soul, as emphasized during the slow "Blues," assimilating Charlie Parker's cooled tones nicely. A near ten-minute "A Night in Tunisia" establishes the loose-tight concept Blakey patented as he dominates the bandstand in loudness. J.J. Johnson's "Wee-Dot" is as definitive a bop flagwaver as there is, with a short head and plenty of solo space. Where Brown was always masterful in a ballad, "Once in a While" showcases his beautifully executed legato sound, but not at the expense of his innate ability to both invent and extrapolate without losing touch of this special melancholy song.
Musicians:
Art Blakey, drums
Horace Silver, piano
Clifford Brown, trumpet
Lou Donaldson, saxophone
Curly Russell, bass
1. Split Kick | 2. Once In A While | 3. Quicksilver | 4. A Night In Tunisia | 5. Mayreh |
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